--- title: GatsbyJS pagination_prev: demos/net/index pagination_next: demos/mobile/index sidebar_custom_props: type: native --- import current from '/version.js'; Gatsby is a framework for creating websites. It uses React components for page templates and GraphQL for loading data. [`gatsby-transformer-excel`](https://www.gatsbyjs.com/plugins/gatsby-transformer-excel/) is a transformer that generates GraphQL nodes for each row of each worksheet. The plugin is officially supported by the Gatsby team. The plugin documentation includes examples and more detailed usage instructions. :::note `gatsby-transformer-excel` is maintained by the Gatsby core team and all bugs should be directed to the main Gatsby project. If it is determined to be a bug in the parsing logic, issues should then be raised with the SheetJS project. ::: :::caution `gatsby-transformer-excel` uses an older version of the library. It can be overridden through a `package.json` override in the latest versions of NodeJS:
{`\
{
"overrides": {
"xlsx": "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz"
}
}`}
:::
## GraphQL details
`gatsby-transformer-excel` generates nodes for each data row of each worksheet.
Under the hood, it uses [`sheet_to_json`](/docs/api/utilities#array-output)
to generate row objects using the headers in the first row as keys.
![pres.xlsx](pathname:///pres.png)
Assuming the file name is `pres.xlsx` and the data is stored in "Sheet1", the
following nodes will be created:
```js
[
{ Name: "Bill Clinton", Index: 42, type: "PresXlsxSheet1" },
{ Name: "GeorgeW Bush", Index: 43, type: "PresXlsxSheet1" },
{ Name: "Barack Obama", Index: 44, type: "PresXlsxSheet1" },
{ Name: "Donald Trump", Index: 45, type: "PresXlsxSheet1" },
{ Name: "Joseph Biden", Index: 46, type: "PresXlsxSheet1" },
]
```
The type is a proper casing of the file name concatenated with the sheet name.
The following query pulls the `Name` and `Index` fields from each row:
```graphql
{
allPresXlsxSheet1 { # "all" followed by type
edges {
node { # each line in this block should be a field in the data
Name
Index
}
}
}
}
```
## GatsbyJS Demo
:::note
This demo was tested on 2023 April 06 against `create-gatsby@3.8.0`. The
generated project used `gatsby@5.8.1` and `react@18.2.0`.
:::
### Project setup
1) Run `npm init gatsby -- -y sheetjs-gatsby` to create the template site.
2) Follow the on-screen instructions for starting the local development server:
```bash
cd sheetjs-gatsby
npm run develop
```
Open a web browser to the displayed URL (typically `http://localhost:8000/`)
3) Edit `package.json` and add the highlighted lines in the JSON object:
{`\
{
// highlight-start
"overrides": {
"xlsx": "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz"
},
// highlight-end
"name": "sheetjs-gatsby",
"version": "1.0.0",
`}
4) Install the library and plugins:
{`\
npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz
npm i --save gatsby-transformer-excel gatsby-source-filesystem
`}
5) Make a `src/data` directory, download {JSON.stringify(data, 2, 2)}); }; export default PageComponent; ``` After saving the file, access `http://localhost:8000/pres`. The displayed JSON is the data that the component receives: ```js { "allPresXlsxSheet1": { "edges": [ { "node": { "Name": "Bill Clinton", "Index": 42 } }, // .... ``` 9) Change `PageComponent` to display a table based on the data: ```jsx title="src/pages/pres.js" import { graphql } from "gatsby" import * as React from "react" export const query = graphql`query { allPresXlsxSheet1 { edges { node { Name Index } } } }`; // highlight-start const PageComponent = ({data}) => { const rows = data.allPresXlsxSheet1.edges.map(r => r.node); return (
Name | Index |
---|---|
{row.Name} | {row.Index} |